Sports broadcaster Jon Naber speaks to 1948 Olympic gold medalist Alice Coachman during the Team USA Road to London 100 Days Out Celebration in Times Square on April 18, 2012, in New York City.Jeff Zelevansky/Getty Images for USOC

Alice Coachman, the Olympic legend who shattered ceilings and the status quo when she became the first black woman to win a gold medal at the games, earning the medal for her 5-foot-6-1/8-inch high jump, has died in her hometown of Albany, Ga., at the age of 90, the New York Times reports.

Coachman had been grappling with health issues in recent months, having suffered a stroke. Her daughter, Evelyn Jones, told the Times that the former track and field star went into cardiac arrest on Monday after having breathing problems.

During the fateful 1948 Olympics Games in London, Coachman not only became the first black woman to secure the gold but also was the only American woman to win a gold in track and field, period.

Despite being honored and wined and dined after her astounding win—having King George VI bestow the medal on her and being invited onto a British royal yacht and congratulated by then-U.S. President Harry Truman—true to the racial tensions of the time, Coachman still suffered through the harsh cruelties of segregation, the Times reports.

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Still, she was cognizant of the impact her medal win had for blacks. “I made a difference among the blacks, being one of the leaders,” she told the New York Times in 1996. “If I had gone to the games and failed, there wouldn’t be anyone to follow in my footsteps. It encouraged the rest of the women to work harder and fight harder.”

After the 1948 Olympics, Coachman retired, turning her attention to her family and teaching in elementary and high school. However, she also continued to inspire young athletes, founding the Alice Coachman Track and Field Foundation to help those young athletes and former competitors who were struggling financially, the Times reports.